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BIOGRAPHIES

Source:
A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County
from The Earliest to the Present Date
by H. S. Knapp
Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co.
- 1863 -

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N OP Q R S T U V W XYZ

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Perry Twp. -
GEORGE HAMILTON.  This Indian was well known to Mr. Coy during his residence in Tuscarawas County.  He was of unmixed blood, but not, as is supposed by some, a chief.  He had fought against Wayne during the Indian war, but in the last war with England acted as any under Gen. Harrison.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 455
HANSON HAMILTON entered the southeast quarter of section 32, Jackson Township, in the year 1816, and removed to it with his family in April, 1820.  When he removed to the township he had no family other than his wife.  The township, although it had been inhabited by a few white families four or five years, and had been organized about a year, was yet sparsely settled.  Although his neighbors were few in number, he refers to them as equal, in morality, virtue, and hospitality, to any among whom he ever lived.  In this respect the country has not improved in the ratio of increase of population and wealth.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 486
WILLIAM HAMILTON emigrated from Washington County, Pennsylvania, to Perry Township, in the fall of 1820 - having previously purchased, of his brother Hugh, the northeast quarter of section 3, in said township.  His family were composed of his wife and seven children - the only survivor of whom, now residing in Perry Township, in Mrs. Mary J., wife of John A. Campbell.
     Mrs. Hamilton
died in October, 1850, at the age of seventy-three years.  Hugh Hamilton, Esq., of Lafayette, born September, 1821, in Perry, is the only son of William Hamilton now a resident of the township.
Ancient Fortifications and Mounds in Jackson and Perry Townships.
    
Upon the land in Jackson Township, now owned by John M. Livingston and John Ramsey, about a mile northeast of Lafayette, are the remains of what is supposed to have been an ancient fortification.  This work is located on the western side of an elevated ridge, but its eastern line reaches the summit.  Its shape is quadrangular.  Before the timber was cleared by the race no occupying it, its outlines could be distinctly traced, but the plow has nearly obliterated them.  The oak timber which was found growing upon its sides was equal in dimensions to any in the surrounding forests.  When the ground was yet in its wild state, only twelve years since, the embankment was about eight feet at its base and eighteen inches in height, these dimensions being very regular.  The area was about one and a half acres.  Within the incluosure of the fort, about twenty-five years since, John H. Hamilton found a hard flint stone, highly polished surface, five inches in length, two inches at the base, and one and a half inches at the point.  The center was encircled by a groove, in which he could bury the point of his finger.
   
 Two ancient mounds also existed in Perry Township, on the farm originally entered by Hugh Hamilton.  They were about thirty feet distant from each other, and occupied the summit of a hill.  The largest was eighteen feet in diameter at its base, and rises four feet above the natural surface.  This one still remains undisturbed, with the exception of having been cleared of its timbers.  The smaller one was about twelve feet in diameter at its base, and was elevated about three feet above the natural surface.  There were no indications that the earth of which these mounds were composed had been taken from the immediate vicinity of their location.
     Some thirty years ago, when William Hamilton was excavating the earth for his cellar, the western side embraced the ground occupied by about one-half of the smaller mound.  After the earth had been removed down to the natural surface, the remains of some wood, supposed to be a root, were discovered; continuing, however, the excavation, it proved to be a shaft of timber that had been placed perpendicularly below the surface.  Following down the decayed wood, the men reached a quantity of coarse but pure sand, and a few inches below this a human skeleton; and yet below this two other skeletons, also imbedded in sand.  The wood, from the point where it entered then sand, was found to be in a good condition of preservation.  The bones of the skeleton were remarkably well preserved, including the teeth and the most delicate portions of those belonging to the fingers and toes.  A few hours' exposure to the atmosphere dissolved all except the larger bones.  One of the skeletons indicated that it had belonged to a person of immense size.  James McMeeken, the largest man in the neighborhood, weighing over two hundred pounds, and having a remarkably full face, would pass the lower jaw of this skeleton over his own countenance without any difficulty.  The end of the shaft referred to terminated at the depth of the lower part of the last skeleton.  It had been dressed so as to present three sides, and the marks of the edged instrument used in dressing it were clearly visible.  There were also imbedded in the sand, about a pint of a powdered substance, resembling Spanish brown paint; also a polished stone, about six inches in length, one inch in width, and half an inch in thickness - the sides and ends being rounded off.  This stone was afterward used to sharpen a Dutch scythe, by Mr. Oner, a revolutionary soldier, and a resident, up to the time of this death, on the farm now owned by William Patterson.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 462
Mohican Twp. -
RICHARD HARGRAVE emigrated from Pennsylvania, and commenced his residence in Jeromeville on the 22d of August, 1818.  He purchased of Mr. Deardoff, one of the original proprietors of the town, in 1820, one-half of his interest in Jeromeville.  He was the second merchant in the place - his predecessors in trade not being very successful, and having abandoned business when he opened his store.

Extracts of a Letter from J. J. Hootman, Esq.
Milo, Defiance County, Ohio, April 1, 1861.

     My father settled in Perry Township, October, 10, 1826.  The appearance of the country at the time of our settlement was quite different from what it is at present.  The major part of the village of Jeromeville was covered with fallen timber and hazel bush.  The improvements on the farms then settled were small, being log cabins surrounded by a few acres of partly cleared land.  The roads were new and unimproved, and many of them little more than bridle-paths.  The prices of produce in 1828-29 were, as I recollect distinctly: wheat 25 cents, (my father was offered 100 bushels for $25, and would not buy at that;) pork $1.50 per cwt.; corn 18 cents; salt $5.00 per barrel; coffee 50 cents per pound; tea 50 cents per quarter; butter 6 cents; eggs 0; iron 12½ cents per pound.  The usual and best market place was Portland, (now Sandusky City.)  Twenty to thirty bushels wheat, a big load for two and four horses, ten days of travel if the roads were good, two weeks if not good.  Massillon became a market town.  The opening of the Ohio Canal run the price of wheat up at once to forty cents, then to fifty, and then our farmers at that time were satisfied, and expressed with wish that the price would continue at that as they then could make money.  Our nearest grist-mill was an old concern known as Goudy's Mill, southeast of Hayesville, with one run of stone, old niggerhead  or boulder stone at that.  Another was Smith's Mill, below Mohicanville, where the Chandler Mill now stands, and of the same sort.  In the winter, when those small streams were frozen, we went to the Clearfork to Manner's Mill, now owned by T. Calhoun.  Sometimes we had to go to Owl Creek, in Knox County.
     Old Mr. Hargrave, I believe, was the first postmaster at Jeromeville, and held the office for twenty-five years.  The mode of travel was on foot or horseback if the roads would permit.

Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 413

Mifflin Twp. (Formerly the town of Petersburg)
DANIEL HARLAN, SEN., an emigrant from Virginia, removed to Mifflin Township, with his family, in April, 1815.  Died in 1824, at the age of 53.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 534

Vermillion Twp. -
WILLIAM HARPER, an emigrant from Jefferson County, Ohio, entered the southwest quarter of section 10, township 21 (Vermillion,) in June, 1815.  The residents of the township at that date were Samuel Bolter, George Ackley, Jonathan Palmer, Robert Finley, William Black, George McClure,,,,,,,,, Samuel Hunt, and James Walters, (the latter acting as justice of the peace.)
     The names of the sons and daughters of William Harper, were John Nancy, Henry, Mary, Sarah, Sophia, and Elizabeth.
    
The nearest mill at this time was Shrimplin's, on Owl Creek.  The trip occupied from four to six days, and was made with four horses and a wagon, which would carry from forty-to fifty bushels.
     There was no wheat raised or for sale in the county at this time.  Corn would bring eighty and one hundred cents.  The animal food was principally venison and other wild game.  About 1819 and 1820 the county began to raise a surplus of agricultural products, and from this time forward the completion of the Ohio Canal, produce would hardly bear transportation to the market, (which was then Sandusky City.)  Mr. Harper on one occasion took a load of flour to market and exchanged his flour for salt, giving two barrels of flour and half a dollar in cash for each barrel of salt.  The first substantial encouragement given the farming and industrial interests was the market afforded by the completion of the Ohio Canal to Massillon; but the construction of the ship canal from the mouth of Huron River to Milan made a yet better market than Massillon, and effected a change in the course of trade.  The railroad system, however, greatly injured Massillon, and almost destroyed its trade.
     William was killed by the running away of his team near Plymouth, Ohio, about 1831.  John now occupies the old homestead.  Nancy is the wife of Joseph SheetsMary is the wife of Joseph Strickland - all residents of Vermillion Township.  Henry  resides in Medina County, Ohio.  Sarah is the wife  of John Cole, and resides in Indiana.  Sophia is the wife of John Hall, of Vermillion Township; and Elizabeth married Charles Reed, and resides in Michigan.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 280
ISAAC HARVOUT emigrated from Chester County, Pennsylvania, and commenced life upon the land which he has since improved and upon which he now resides, in October, 1819.  His family at this time consisted of his wife and four children, namely:  Julia A., Rebecca, Mary, and Rachel.  His farm originally consisted of one hundred acres in section 16.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 161 - Clearcreek  Twp.
NATHANIEL HASKELL was born in Windsor county, Vermont, October 3, 1792.  He emigrated to Ohio in 1817, and located in Cleveland.  In July, 1818, he removed to Wooster, Wayne county, where he remained three years, and located in Loudonville, Richland, now Ashland county.  Soon after his arrival, he erected a carding-machine and fulling mill, which for several years was a great neighborhood convenience.  In April, 1823, he married Hettia A. Skinner, the daughter of a pioneer, who erected the first grist-mill in the vicinity of Loudonville.  Mr. Haskell was a thrifty business man and accumulated property quite rapidly.  He laid out an addition to Loudonville, and, by his business energy and strict integrity, contributed to the growth of the town.  He was long engaged in the mercantile business, and possessed tact and energy in its management.  He took a deep interest in the school system of Ohio, and was always liberal in forwarding the interest of education.  He was, for many years, an active member of the Masonic fraternity, and noted for his genial disposition and love for that ancient order.  In his later years - 1868 - he became the principal stockholder and owner of the Haskell bank of Loudonville, which was an institution of deposit and exchange, and was managed by him.  In 1855 his excellent wife deceased.  September 30, 1871, Mr. Haskell deceased, leaving his bank interest to a nephew, he having died childless.  The institution was conducted by the nephew until 1875, when he deceased.
NATHANIEL HASKELL established himself at Loudonville, in April, 1820, and purchased the flouring mill on the Black Fork, one-half mile north of the town.  To this he added machinery for the manufacture of woollen goods.  In 1826, he disposed of his interest to Thomas J. Bull, and subsequently the mills passed into the hands of J. C. Larwill.  About 1828, Mr. Haskell engaged in the mercantile business, in which he continued about twenty-eight years - having been a merchant a longer continuous period, probably, than any other within the present limits of the county.

Direct Trade with New Orleans, etc.

     From 1817 until about 1830, a direct trade, by means of flat-boats, was conducted with Louisville and New Orleans - the boats passing down the Black Fork into the Mohican, then into the White Woman, (or Walhonding, as it is now named,) thence into the Muskingum, and thence into the Ohio.  These boats were generally freighted with flour and whisky, and would carry about forty-five tons.  The completion of the Muskingum improvement and Walhonding Canal cut off this trade.  During the period of this commercial intercourse with New Orleans, flour at Loudonville would command from $2.50 to $3 per barrel, and would sell at the former place for $5 @ $6.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 377

Mifflin Twp. (Formerly the town of Petersburg)
BENJAMIN HERSHEY, emigrated from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, in October, 1825, and settled upon the southwest quarter of section 31, Montgomery Township; being land that he had purchased the year previous.  A year or two subsequent he purchased, of Andrew Newman, the mill property on the Black Fork, owners, the Messrs. Stayman.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 534
Perry Township -
JOHN HELLMAN emigrated for Centre County, Pennsylvania, and settled in Perry Township, June 17th, 1818.  He purchased of Elijah Charles  the southwest quarter of section 3, which land he improved, and has up to the present date made his home.  His family at the time of emigration, consisted of his wife and three children, viz.:  David, Mary, and Catherine.  The first mentioned is now a resident of Jackson township; Mary is the wife of Daniel Eshelman, of Lafayette, and Catherine is the wife of George Walkey, of Perry Township.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 465
JACOB HIFFNER, JR., emigrated with his family, consisting of his wife and three daughters, from Franklin County, Pennsylvania to Orange township, in November, 1817, and during the same year purchased of John Mackerell the southwest quarter of section 14 - being the land upon which he yet resides.  Four families from Pennsylvania traveled in company, and settled in Orange Township at the same time, namely, those of his father, Jacob Hiffner, Sr., of his brother, Frederick Hiffner, and of his brother-in-law, Ridenour.
His First Year's Experience:
     Mr. Hiffner erected a temporary cabin upon the land of his father, which afforded shelter for his family during the winter of 1817-18.  In the mean time he had constructed a rude cabin upon his own place, and in April, 1818, removed his family and scanty stock of household effects into it, and engaged in the improvement of his land.  When he commenced housekeeping, his cabin was without a door, chimney, or floor - the fire being made upon the ground in the center of the cabin, and the smoke finding its way out chiefly through an open place in one end of the roof designed for the future chimney of the cabin.  Mr. Hiffner avers that the best pone he ever eat was made of soft and rotten corn, purchased at Stibb's mill, and eaten with an appetite sharpened by a long fast and severe bodily toil.  Being skilled in the use of the rifle, his family never suffered for want of venison or other wild meat.  Good breadstuffs, however, were not in the country, and the most miserable quality, which the swine of this day would reject, could only be obtained a a great distance, and at one dollar per bushel.  His severest trials passed away with the first year.  Since that time his industry ahs been amply rewarded, as has been the case with most of the pioneers who yet survive in Orange Township; he now approaches the close of his seventy-seventh year, in vigorous health and blessed in all the comforts that belong to an earthly home.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 519
JOHN HILDERBRAND removed to Hanover Township in 1823, and settled upon the land which has since remained his residence.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 378
CALVIN HILL, an emigrant from Vermont, purchased, in November, 1811, the and in Green Township, which subsequently became his homestead for many years.  This farm is now the property of G. W. Carey, Esq.  His nearest neighbors were Captain Ebenizer Rice, (father of Alexander Rice, who lived on the place now occupied by the latter;) Joseph Jones, (who owned the farm upon which now resides John Taylor;) Judge Thomas Coulter, (who lived upon the quarter directly south of Charles Tannehill;) Lewis Hill, (who resided immediately below what is now the town of Perryville;) Solomon Hill, (who resided immediately above said town;) Moses Adzit son-in-law of Solomon Hill, (and who resided upon the place of his father-in-law;) Melzer Tannehill, (whose farm adjoined Judge Coulter's on the east;) Lewis Oliver, (whose farm was directly east of Charles Tannehill;) and Jeremiah Conine, (whose farm was east of Melzer Tannehill's;) Sylvester Fisher, (whose land joined Mr. Rice's on the northwest;) - these were the neighbors of Mr. Hill.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 325
FREDERICK A. HINE emigrated from Butler County, Pennsylvania, and removed to the land in Jackson Township, which he had previously entered, being the southeast quarter of section 11, in the year 1829.  His family consisted of himself and nine children.  Mr. Hine and his sons Charles and John  are the only surviving members of the original family who now reside in Jackson Township - the others being dead or removed.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 487
Montgomery Twp. -
JOHN HOUGH, born in Frederick County, Maryland, removed to Montgomery Township in 1823.  In the following year, he purchased of Benjamin Byers, of Wayne County, the quarter section upon which he has since resided.  When he removed to the county his family consisted of his wife and eight children  only three of whom now survive, namely, John and William and Mrs. Mary Eichelbarger.
    
The town of Ashland, at the period of his arrival, contained not more than half a dozen families, while Jeromeville was quite a flourishing town.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 195
CHARLES HOY removed with his family to Jackson Township in May, 1817, and, in company with John Meason, entered the southwest quarter of section 2, and the northwest quarter of section 11, in Jackson Township.  His family at this time consisted of his wife and one child, (Joseph Hoy, late of New Orleans.)  He had previously resided in Stark County.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 487
ABRAHAM HUFFMAN emigrated from Virginia, in 1816, and purchased of his brother Jacob the farm now owned by William Smyth, and removed to it in 1819.  This farm he improved and resided upon until the year 1837, when he sold it to John Musser, and purchased of Elias Ford the farm upon which he now resides.  When he came to the country, the family of Mr. Huffman consisted of his wife and two sons, Benjamin and Samuel.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 161
DANIEL HUFFMAN emigrated from Brook County, Virginia, to the east half of section 31, Clearcreek Township, with his wife and children, Zachariah, Susan, and Abram, in the spring of 1815.  He entered his land at the United States Land Office.  His second crop of maple sugar he sold at Wooster, for eighteen cents per pound, cash - a remarkably fortunate sale for those times.
     Mr. Huffman improved his farm and continued upon it until 1848, when he removed to Ashland, where he died on the 19th of October, 1860, at the age of seventy-five years.
     Benjamin, John, William, Mary Ann, Sarah Jane, Daniel, and Perrin C. were born in Clearcreek Township
     Benjamin Huffman, who has resided the last twenty years upon the farm adjoining the old homestead, is the only one of the sons now residing in the county.

Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 161
ANDREW HUMPHREY removed with his family, consisting of his wife and four children, to Green Township, in the year 1824. He emigrated from Champaign County, Ohio.  The previous year he had purchased the half section now owned and occupied by his son, William Humphrey.  He died in 1850, at the age of sixty.  William and John Humphrey both residing in Green Township, are the only surviving members of the family.  The north part of the township, when Mr. Humphrey removed to it was an unbroken wilderness - now house between him and Mohicanville and Hayesville, and only one or two between him and Perrysville.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 325
WILLIAM HUNTER, an emigrant from Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, removed with his family, consisting of his wife and eight children, to Green Township, in March, 1818, and commenced improvement upon the north half of section 26.  He originally emigrated from Ireland, and was an officer in the Federal service against the insurgents in the "whisky insurrection."
     He died on the 17th of January, 1819, at the age of forty-seven.  He had been to the mill at Newville, and on his return his family discovered, from an unusual appearance in his features, that he was ill.  He remarried to his family, "Faith, childers, I believe I am poisoned," and laid himself down before the broad fireplace, so close to the embers of the hearth that his feet were partly imbedded in the warm ashes.  His trembling limbs created a great dust, which, added to his chattering teeth, despite their warm sympathy for their father's affliction, provoked mirth from the little ones.  This demonstration so annoyed the sufferer, that he raised himself up, and demanded to know whether they had "no better manners than to laugh at the miseries of a dying man," and made an effort to give the children "a brush."  His attack proved to be a hard ague chill - the first of which he or his family had any experience - and which, in about three months, resulted in his death.
     Of his sons, David, James, William and John yet reside in Green Township.
     About two years after the death of the elder Mr. Hunter, his widow died, leaving a family of nine orphan children - the eldest boy being between sixteen and seventeen years of age, and the youngest only fourteen months.  This young family, in a new and wild country, struggled with the privations that beset them, and remained together (with the exception of two sisters, who married) until David, the senior brother, attained the age of twenty-seven years.  On the third morning after the death of the widow, the youngest child rose and, approaching the bed formerly occupied by his mother, called upon her in piteous terms to receive him - an incident which opened afresh the fountains of grief in the elder members of the family.

     How David Hunter obtained his first Fruit Trees.

     Some years after the death of his parents, David Hunter, on his way to Mansfield to pay his tax, met, for the first time, with Johnny Appleseed.  The two sat down upon a log and engaged in conversation- Hunter dividing with his new acquaintance the first cakes he had taken with him to sustain himself on his journey.  Johnny inquired into the circumstances of Hunter's family, where he lived, etc., and receiving answers, advised the young man that he should not delay in obtaining and transplanting trees for an orchard.  Hunter stated that he was too poor to pay for the trees.  His new friends rejoined that he could supply him with fifty or sixty trees, and that as to the question of pay, it was a matter of no moment whether they were ever paid for.  He then told Hunter to call upon his brother-in-law, William Broom, (who lived upon the farm now owned by William Cowan, Esq.) and obtain the trees.  He did so, and from this beginning, has made additions until now he has  orchards numbering over six hundred fruit trees.
Source: A History of the Pioneer and Modern Times of Ashland County from The Earliest to the Present Date, by H. S. Knapp, Publ. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. - 1863 - Page 326

 

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